
Bruce Bowerman
Professor of Biology
B.A., Kansas State University
Ph.D., University of California, San Francisco
Member of: Institute of Molecular Biology
Office: Streisinger Hall Room 375E
Telephone: 541-346-0853
Lab: Streisinger Hall Room 375
Telephone: 541-346-4551
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Bowerman Movies
Movie Legends: 6 Caenorhabditis elegans and 2 Platynereis dumerilii movies
A small number of males are made spontaneously, but most populations consist almost entirely of hermaphrodites (unless you single out males and hermaphrodites and set up crosses, in which case when a cross works, half the progeny are male and half are female, just as with people). We grow and maintain strains of C. elegans on plates like these. We use a platinum wire “spoon” to pick them up and transfer them from plate to plate, or to watch glasses where we cut them open with a scalpel to recover early stage embryos. Almost all of the work on C. elegans in the Bowerman lab focuses on using molecular genetics and other methods to study the function of the microtubule and microfilament cytoskeleton during early embryonic cell divisions. Some of the processes that we focus on currently include cell polarity, meiotic and mitotic spindle assembly and positioning, chromosome segregation, and cytokinesis.
We isolate early stage embryos by cutting open an adult wild-type hermaphrodite in a watch glass (submerged in buffer). A mouth pipette is then used to transfer the embryo to a small agar pad on a glass slide, and the embryo then overlaid with a glass cover slip and mounted on a compound microscope with Differential Interference Contrast (DIC) optics.
Note the appearance of the oocyte and sperm pronuclei, which appear after the completion of meiosis II (at which time chromosomes decondense and nuclear envelopes form). The oocyte pronucleus is to the left (anterior pole) and the sperm pronucleus to the right (posterior pole). The sperm donates two centrosomes, in addition to chromosomes, and these centrosomes stay associated with the sperm pronucleus. These two haploid pronuclei migrate towards each other, meeting near the posterior pole. After they meet, they rotate and “centrate” with the spindle forming in the center of the embryo, aligned with long axis (the anterior-posterior axis). During anaphase of the first mitosis, the spindle moves slightly towards the posterior pole, and the posterior spindle pole rocks back and forth. This posterior displacement results in an unequal or asymmetric first mitotic cell division. Both daughters are born committed to distinct fates. Thus the first mitotic division provides an nice model for studying asymmetric cell division, a fundamental developmental process that generates cells with different fates during embryogenesis. The posterior daughter (called P1) is smaller than the anterior daughter (called AB), and divides later.
Notice that P1 divides more along the anterior-posterior axis, while AB divides more transversely. One focus of the research in the Bowerman lab is to understand how these different spindle positioning events are genetically programmed and controlled. These early embryonic events are all very reproducible and stereotyped in wild-type embryos. We study mutants in which these processes are defective; these time-lapse movies allow us to study in detail the nature of the defects we observe during cell division in mutant embryos. See Movie 6 for an example of an abnormal cell division in a mutant embryo.
Being able to watch cell division with different molecular structures marked with GFP-tagged proteins is an important tool for us in studying cell division in wild-type and mutant embryos. As in Movie 2, this movie shows the first two mitotic divisions. The bright objects at the periphery of the embryo, towards the anterior pole at the left, are the polar bodies, which contain chromosomes that were discarded during meiosis I and II. Note the differences in cell cycle timing at the 2-cell stage, the condensation of chromosomes as cells enter mitosis, and the different orientation and position of the chromosomes at metaphase during each division. These events are all very reproducible and stereotyped in wild-type embryos. We study mutants in which these processes are defective; these time-lapse movies allow us to study in detail the nature of the defects we observe during cell division in mutant embryos. See Movie 6 for an example of an abnormal cell division in a mutant embryo.
Being able to watch cell division with different molecular structures marked with GFP-tagged proteins is an important tool for us in studying cell division in wild-type and mutant embryos. This movie shows only the first mitotic division. Note the rotation and centration of the mitotic spindle early in this division, which occur very early in mitosis.
Thimo Kurz in my lab positionally cloned the rfl-1 gene and found that it encodes an E1 activating enzyme for the ubiquitin-like protein called Nedd8 in humans. Nedd8 is is a ubiquitin-like protein that is conjugated to Cullin proteins by a “Nedd8 conjugation pathway” that includes an E1 activating enzyme, an E2 conjugating enzyme and an E3 ligase). Cullin proteins themselves are the scaffolds for ubiquitin E3 ligases, which mediate the covalent modification of many different proteins by the highly conserved protein ubiquitin.Poly-ubiquitination targets proteins for degradation by the proteasome. One ubiquitin E3 ligase is required in the early C. elegans embryo to degrade a protein called MEL-26, which regulates actomyosin contractility. The same ubiquitin E3 ligase is also required to degrade prior to mitosis another protein called MEI-1/Katanin, which is part of a microtubule severing complex.
In the absence of RFL-1 function, MEL-26 accumulates to abnormally high levels and promotes extra furrowing during pronuclear migration and during cytokinesis. Also in rfl-1(-) mutant embryos, Katanin is NOT degraded before mitosis, leading to abnormally short microtubules (and defects in mitotic spindle positioning, assembly, and function). See Kurz et al (2002), Pintard et al (2003), and Kurz et al (2005) for more information on this topic of research in the Bowerman lab. This mutant provides one example of how we make discoveries about gene function by using molecular genetics to study cell division in the early C. elegans embryo.
This movie shows an adult male polychaete (it is in a shallow tray with sea water). Platynereis dumerilii is a marine annelid (earthworms are also in this same phylum), and is one of many species of polychaete (segmented worms that build various tubes in which they mature to adulthood). We grow these polychaetes in trays of sea water. They feed upon protozoans that in turn feed upon lettuce (which we maintain in separate cultures and give to the worms on a regular schedule). Platynereis breeds according to a lunar cycle; we use artificial lighting to control spawning such that it occurs every two weeks. See Movie 8 for two spawning adults!
Adult male and female polychaetes were placed in a small watch glass with seawater; the adults are about 30 or 40 mm long (one to two inches). The female swims in tight circles, while the male swims in larger circles that intersect with the female’s circles. Watch for the male sperm appearing first, and then thousands of eggs! Pretty impressive, isn’t it? This results in the production of thousands of synchronously dividing embryos, and enables us to easily characterize large numbers of synchronously developing embryos. The embryos are about 100 microns in diamter and spherical.
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